




Many Investors Bank customers will soon find an empty building where they once traveled to take care of their financial matters.
Last year, Citizens Bank, headquartered in Providence, Rhode Island, acquired New Jersey-based Investors Bank. While Investors’ doors remained open to customers, the process of the merger began in August as investment accounts transferred to Citizens, and in October, mortgage loan services transitioned from Investors to Citizens.
According to the Citizens website, the merger will “offer Investors’ customers an expanded set of products and services, enhanced online and mobile banking capabilities, and more branch locations, along with a continued commitment to making a difference in our local communities.”
While the East Northport location on
Larkfield Road will remain open doing business under the Citizens name, the Investors Commack location on Jericho Turnpike will close Feb. 14. The Huntington branch on Main Street and the Setauket location on Route 25A will close their doors for the last time Feb. 15. All three due-to-be closed branches have Citizens operating nearby.
Nuno Dos Santos, retail director of Citizens, said the banks located in Commack, Huntington and East Setauket are less than 2 miles away from the Investors branches that are closing.
“As we continue to integrate Investors with Citizens, we have been reviewing customer patterns and branch locations to ensure we are serving customers when, where and how they prefer,” Dos Santos said. “As a result of this review, we will close the Investors branch locations in Commack, Huntington and Setauket.”
Current Investors employees have been encouraged to apply for positions at Citizens, according to a company spokesperson.
The VILLAGE TIMES HERALD (USPS 004-808) is published Thursdays by TBR News Media, 185 Route 25A, Setauket, NY 11733. Periodicals postage paid at Setauket, NY and additional mailing offices. Subscription price $59 annually. Leah S. Dunaief, Publisher. POSTMASTER: Send change of address to P.O. Box 707, Setauket, NY 11733.
Despite the chiseled blocks of ice stationed around the village, downtown Port Jefferson was red hot last weekend during the 4th annual Port Jefferson Ice Festival, hosted by the village’s Business Improvement District.
This two-day celebration took place on Jan. 28 and 29, bringing together several local institutions, dozens of small businesses and a whole lot of ice. Roger Rutherford, Port Jefferson BID president and general manager of Roger’s Frigate, summarized the boost the festival brought to storefronts.
“This is the slowest time of the year for the business community,” he said. “This is our fourth annual, and it has really taken off and turned into something spectacular.”
Making the festivities possible required significant organizational collaboration between the BID and its partners. The Greater Port Jefferson Chamber of Commerce assisted by facilitating a mac ’n’ cheese crawl.
With 12 participating restaurants, the crawl offered festivalgoers a chance to taste various cuisines from food establishments around the village.
“This is the second year they asked us to be the administrators for the mac ’n’ cheese crawl,” said chamber executive director Barbara Ransome. “They go to 12 places. It’s four ounces of mac ’n’ cheese [per stop], so you’re talking three pounds [in all].” She added, “It’s a lot of mac ’n’ cheese.”
Thousands flocked to the village to partake in the fun, including trustee Stan Loucks who projected the weekend as one of the highest local turnouts on record.
“I have never seen so many people in our village,” he said. “The merchants were extremely happy with the crowd. They did very well this weekend, and I think it was terrific to see that
many people walking around our village.”
James Luciano, owner of PJ Lobster House, reacted to the festival’s success in stimulating small businesses. “This festival brings in a lot of business for us,” he said. “This time of year, you’re lucky to get a couple of tables for lunch and a couple of bar customers.” But, he added, “We’ve been full since we opened the door.”
The sizable show gave much-needed relief to storefront owners still recovering from the aftereffects of the COVID-19 pandemic. Almost three years ago, the world and nation were shocked by the outbreak of the pandemic, leaving downtowns such as Port Jeff’s in disarray.
Indu Kaur is the owner of the Curry Club at SāGhar in Port Jefferson, an establishment that opened in February 2020, just weeks before the lockdowns.
“We took over the business and had no idea that we were going to be shut down,” Kaur said, describing the impact of the pandemic on her business as “a huge tragedy.”
In the face of hardship, Kaur and her staff continued operations by donating meals, then reopened in the fall of that year. With a historic turnout villagewide, Kaur regarded the resurgence of the downtown businesses with delight.
“It’s so exciting to see everyone walking around, enjoying our village, enjoying the new restaurants, the new shows and our ice sculptures,” she said.
Outside Kaur’s restaurant lay a decorative ice sculpture depicting Ganesha, a Hindu deity tying into the theme of local renaissance. “Lord Ganesha is the statue that we all have faith brings prosperity, happiness and peace,” she said.
Ganesha was just one of a few dozen ice sculptures displayed throughout the village. Many visitors stood and posed with the ice, which was
often interactive. Some sculptures depicted animals, others tied in with the businesses for which they were custom made.
Rich Daly, president and owner of Ice Memories, has created sculptures during each of the festival’s four iterations. He discussed the considerable effort and material that made it all possible.
“We do live carvings and have about 90,000 pounds worth of ice set up throughout town,” supplied by Riverhead-based Long Island Ice, Daly said. “Every year, we add more ice and more activities for everybody to do.”
Daly got interested in ice sculpting during culinary school, where he first received an ice carving assignment. “Once they put a chainsaw in my hands, I just never let it go,” he said.
Given how a sculpture shapeshifts and reforms during the different melting stages, the temporality and mutability of the ice medium offer both challenge and opportunity for creative expression.
“It’s a temporary art form, which makes it unique,” Daly said. “Especially on a day like today or a weekend like this, Mother Nature just doesn’t want the ice to be around,” adding, “As it melts, it just kind of changes and transforms, and it’s pretty cool.”
Daly said the process is relatively straightforward for those interested in carving ice. Blocks of ice, he said, can be acquired at most ice plants on Long Island. “It doesn’t take a crazy amount of money to buy tools,” he said. “Just have at it. Start [carving] whatever inspires you.”
Spring-like temperatures and melting points played a prominent role throughout the festival, with some environmentalists ringing the alarm about the threat of climate change.
Posted along Main, a small group of protesters lined the sidewalks with signs that read: “There is no planet ‘B’” and “Be nice, save the ice.” Holly Fils-Aime, president of the local environmental group EcoLeague, discussed how the melting sculptures signal a dangerous trend.
“The fact that these sculptures didn’t last the day because it’s so warm out here in January is a great teaching device,” Fils-Aime said.
Picketing alongside Fils-Aime was village resident Myrna Gordon, who stressed the importance of local government in identifying environmental problems and implementing science-based solutions.
“In my own village here in Port Jefferson, I think that a lot more has to be done with environmental issues,” she said. “Having an ice festival is wonderful — bringing people to the village, helping the businesses. But we also need to focus on very, very serious issues that are happening here.”
Through the ice fest, scores of people interacted with the various facets of the community. While there wasn’t an ice sculpture outside the Bayles Boat Shop, boat builders continued their work on the Resolution whaleboat project.
“We’re in the finalizing stages of lofting,” said John Janicek, treasurer of the boat shop. After that, the buildout of the keel and stem can commence.
As the whaleboat enters a pivotal moment in its buildout process, the village is undergoing a transition of its own, moving into the postpandemic era. With downtown thriving once again, Deputy Mayor Kathianne Snaden gave her thoughts on these positive developments.
“It was incredible to see so many people enjoy the village this time of year,” she said. “The businesses were thriving, the restaurants were full. There were shoppers and diners, and it was great to see the comeback.”
In 2016, two students at Ward Melville High School — Josh Farahzad and Hugh Ferguson — founded Mission: Toothbrush, a nonprofit to provide free dental hygiene supplies to local residents. Today, the organization has expanded past Ward Melville and is collecting toothbrushes, toothpaste and dental floss for soup kitchens and shelters across Long Island and beyond.
Mission: Toothbrush, operated entirely by students, collects and distributes hygiene supplies throughout Long Island, according to presidents Riya Sangwan and Mikaeel Zohair, current seniors at Ward Melville. Since its founding, the group has collected and distributed more than $75,000 in donations, according to the organization’s website.
The presidents first joined the nonprofit as volunteers after hearing about the group through WMHS upperclassmen.
Sangwan said she was inspired to join the organization after noticing the lack of dental hygiene supplies at soup kitchens she volunteered with since seventh grade. After hearing about the organization, she signed up as a volunteer. As a ninth grader, she was selected as the organization’s ambassador in R.C. Murphy and P.J. Gelinas junior high schools, the two schools that feed into Ward Melville.
“It was really special to see that there’s a lack of something, and then get to work and contribute toward it,” Sangwan said.
Zohair, who hopes to enroll in dental school and become an orthodontist, has always had an interest in oral hygiene. “I just think it’s really important that we all have equal access to hygiene supplies,” he said, adding that he joined the organization immediately after hearing about it.
“I wanted to be part of something bigger,” he said.
Under Sangwan and Zohair, the nonprofit has expanded its reach beyond Ward Melville. The pair have coordinated supply drives for toothbrushes at Sachem East, Port Jefferson’s Earl L. Vandermeulen, Comsewogue, Brooklyn Technical and New York City’s Stuyvesant high schools.
Mission: Toothbrush founders Farahzad and Ferguson, graduates of Ward Melville’s Class of 2017, knew they wanted to build an organization from the ground up, but didn’t expect it to last this long.
“We had this restless energy that we wanted to build something with,” Farahzad said.
“We spent a lot of time observing the high school ecosystem, and a lot of that is joining clubs, sports teams and doing homework,” Ferguson said. “We wanted to break out of that a little bit. There’s unalienable things you can learn by starting your own group.”
The pair began by holding supply drives at local supermarkets like Stop & Shop,
where they asked incoming customers to purchase items while shopping and drop them off as they exited. During its earlier years, the organization’s supply drives were run by Farahzad, Ferguson and a handful of friends. Today, the group has more than 100 registered student volunteers.
“I thought that Mission: Toothbrush would probably last a year or two past our graduation,” Ferguson said. “And then we thought it would fizzle out. The credit for the group’s longevity goes to the classes of people who did all the work we handed off.”
Today, more than five years after Farahzad and Ferguson’s high school graduation, Mission: Toothbrush has plans to branch into educational roles alongside its supply drives, Sangwan and Zohair said.
“We’re looking to bring dental health education to schools and to libraries, where we want to do presentations about the importance of oral hygiene for elementary school audiences,” Zohair explained.
“I also definitely see the educational initiative going a lot further, not only in our immediate community but also in different communities across Long Island,” Sangwan said.
The presidents are also building relationships with high school and college students, such as undergraduates at nearby Stony Brook University, with the goal of “setting up their own Mission: Toothbrush branches at different schools around the
state,” Sangwan said.
Ultimately, the group hopes to build ties with organizations throughout the Island and engage with more community members, Sangwan added.
“We’re starting to prioritize our
community legacy,” Sangwan said. “We would love to see us involved in the larger community, not only among students.”
For more information on Mission: Toothbrush, visit its website: missiontoothbrush.org.
Proud grandparents Richard and Diane Melidosian, of Stony Brook, and Xu Zhiskeng and Yang Xiaming, of Changsha, China, welcomed Asher Reese Melidosian on Jan. 11.
His parents are John and Dr. Bihui Melidosian of Wilmington, Delaware. John Melidosian is a 2002 graduate of Ward Melville High School.
The Suffolk County Police Department has observed a recent uptick in stolen vehicles and now urges residents to take precautions.
Detective Richard Marra of SCPD offered a brief history of the crime phenomenon in a phone interview. While vehicle theft cases have been recurrent, the detective noted that the crime is relatively preventable.
“Ninety percent of the cars that are stolen are probably stolen because [drivers] leave the key fobs in the car,” he said.
Marra said the police department first noticed the trend about three years ago when an organized out-of-state group started targeting luxury models.
“We had a group of guys coming out of New Jersey, mostly from Newark, and they would go to the more affluent neighborhoods,” he said. “They’d come in a van, walk down the street and look for any kind of foreign car.”
Thieves often sought out vehicles with the mirrors folded open. This, Marra said, was an indicator that the vehicle was unlocked.
If the key fob was left inside, they would easily steal the vehicle. If not, they may rummage through it for hidden valuables.
“Three years ago, it was crazy,” Marra said. “It slowed down a little bit in the last eight
months, but we still have a lot of thefts of cars because the key fobs are left in the car.”
The SCPD detective said that the New Jersey bunch often resold their stolen cars on the secondary market. In a highly coordinated manner, they would steal the cars, drive to New Jersey, remove any GPS trackers and then prepare them for international shipment.
“When they had a container ready, they put them on the container, and it was usually going to South Africa,” Marra said.
While the group from New Jersey had targeted luxury models, some vehicle thieves are less interested in the car’s resale value than its utility.
Marra said some would use the vehicle to temporarily transport drugs or steal catalytic
converters, then discard it. While victims of this variety of theft often retrieved their stolen cars, its condition could be irreversibly impaired.
“The ones that are taking just any car — anything that happens to be left with the fob in it — may drive it around for a day or two and then leave it somewhere,” he said. “Sometimes it’s destroyed, sometimes it’s not, but most of the time it’s not in the shape you left it in.”
The spike in vehicle theft follows another auto theft crime that has hit the county, the theft of catalytic converters. [See story, “Catalytic converter theft on the rise in Suffolk County,” TBR News Media website, Feb. 26, 2022.]
Marra indicated that catalytic converter theft has fallen off substantially in recent months due primarily to coordinated arrests conducted with the federal government.
For residents to protect themselves from vehicle theft, he said there is a simple solution — taking their fobs with them as they exit their cars.
“If people would take their key fobs with them and never leave them in the car, I’d say 90 to 95% of the car thefts would go down,” the detective said. “You just have to keep your keys in your pocket instead of leaving them in the console or the glove compartment.”
He added, “I know it’s nice to just jump in and drive away — but then everybody could jump in and drive away.”
The Three Village Central School District will be offering a district-operated, tuition-free, half-day Pre-Kindergarten program for the 2023-2024 school year. There is an Enrichment option that will allow families to extend their child’s Pre-K day. Families interested in learning more about the Pre-Kindergarten programs are encouraged to visit the Pre-K page of the Three Village district website. Links & information for the lottery applications are currently available on the Pre-K page. All student lottery applicants must be registered in the district with a Student ID# in order to be considered in the lottery. Children must be 4 years old on or before December 1, 2023. For more information please visit: https://sites.google.com/3villagecsd.org/3vpre-k/home
All applications are due by end of day February 17, 2023. Questions? Please visit the FAQ section of our Pre-K page.
The following incidents have been reported by Suffolk County Police:
Pedestrian killed in Rocky Point
Suffolk County Police Seventh Squad detectives are investigating a motor vehicle crash that killed a pedestrian in Rocky Point on Jan. 30. Thomas O’Brien was driving a 2018 Subaru Forrester eastbound on Route 25A, east of Rocky Point Road, when his vehicle struck a pedestrian who was crossing the road on Jan. 30 at 9:30 p.m. The pedestrian, Sharif Murray, 21, of Rocky Point, was pronounced dead at the scene. O’Brien, 75, and his wife, Mildred O’Brien, 75, of Shoreham, were not injured.
Suffolk County District Attorney Raymond A. Tierney announced on Jan. 27 that Leslie Mroz, 39, of Selden, was sentenced to two to six years in prison for allegedly embezzling more than $340,000 from her employer over the course of approximately three years.
“This defendant wasted no time abusing the trust that her employer placed in her by stealing from her employer,” Tierney said. “She will now face justice and serve prison time for her greed.”
An investigation conducted by the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office and the Suffolk County Police Department revealed that from February 2016 to February 2019, Mroz was employed by a Medford company where she handled payroll as part of her responsibilities as the Human Resources manager. The position gave her the ability to manipulate her salary and the benefits she received. At the time her theft was discovered, Mroz was paying herself more than double the salary that her employer had authorized.
A review of company records also revealed that Mroz was also making unauthorized contributions to her retirement fund and health insurance.
The owner of the small family-run Medford business where Mroz worked, who asked not to be named for privacy concerns, stated that Mroz’s theft of over $340,000 had the potential to ruin her company. However, she said what hurt her the most was that
Suffolk County Crime Stoppers and Suffolk County Police Fourth Squad detectives are seeking the public’s help to identify and locate the man who allegedly exposed himself and committed a lewd act at a Lake Grove store.
A man allegedly exposed himself and committed a lewd act in front of a female in the cafe located in Barnes and Noble at the Smith Haven Mall on Dec. 9 at approximately 4:35 p.m.
Mroz was considered a trusted employee and had been accepted as part of her family. Mroz pleaded guilty to one count of Grand Larceny in the Second Degree in October. She was sentenced on Jan. 23 to two to six years in prison.
Suffolk County Police arrested a Middle Island man who allegedly robbed a Centereach bank on Jan. 31. Ralph William Dominguez entered M&T Bank, located at 1919 Middle Country Road, and allegedly handed a note demanding cash to a bank teller. The employee complied and Dominguez fled on foot at approximately 3:20 p.m.
Approximately 25 minutes later, a man matching his description was located by Sixth Precinct patrol officers in the parking lot of 7-Eleven at 1740 Middle Country Road, Centereach. He was taken into custody and charged with Robbery 3rd Degree, a felony.
Suffolk County Crime Stoppers offers a cash reward for information that leads to an arrest. Anyone with information about these incidents can contact Suffolk County Crime Stoppers to submit an anonymous tip by calling 1-800-220-TIPS.
The Ward Melville Patriots looked for a much-needed win against Centereach in a League II matchup at home, but the Cougars were able to keep the Patriots at bay, snatching a 57-53 victory Friday, Jan. 27.
Ward Melville, trailing by nine points to open the second half, were able to trim the deficit by one point late in the game, but the Cougar defense was able to thwart the threat.
Senior Derek Zhang topped the scoring charts for the Cougars with 14 points, and senior Christopher Buzaid netted 13.
Lorenzo Beaton scored 17 points for the Patriots, and
Devin Lynch banked 13.
The win lifts the Cougars to 8-5 in the division, securing a playoff berth. The loss drops the Patriots to 5-7 with four games remaining before postseason play begins.
The Cougars retake the court Feb. 4 with a road game against crosstown rival Newfield at 11:15 a.m.
Ward Melville took on Longwood during a road game Jan. 31 where the Patriots won, 54-50.
Pictured clockwise from above, Patriots Devin Lynch battles Evan Grant; Lynch scores; Ward Melville junior Lorenzo Beaton fights Logan Norman for the rebound; and Ward Melville junior Luke Chitkara drives the baseline.
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times” (Charles Dickens, “A Tale of Two Cities”).
In England, during the reign of King Charles I, the Crown and the Anglican Church were making fortunes in the slave trade. The Royal African Company, founded in 1672, held the English monopoly in transporting Africans, to the thirteen American colonies, to the Caribbean and to the British Isles. “They held the monopoly until 1698, when all Englishmen received the right to trade in Enslaved Persons” (Senate House Library Archives, University of London).
On Long Island, with the economy based on agriculture, slaves were bought, sold and traded extensively. They were used in every occupation and skill. “In 1698, 21.5% of Suffolk’s population was Black, nearly all of them slaves” (Dr. Grania Bolton Marcus, “A Forgotten People: Discovering the Black Experience in Suffolk County”).
In 1723, two events occurred more than 400 miles apart that would come together in London, England. In Connecticut, James Wetmore, one of the graduates of the Yale College class of 1714, sailed to England as a postulant for Anglican ordination. Despite the hazards of a voyage across the Atlantic, especially in winter, as well as the real threat of contracting smallpox, Wetmore was inspired to move from the restrictive Presbyterian and Puritan teachings to become an Anglican priest. Wetmore was ordained by the Bishop of London, Edmund Gibson, in July 1723. He was most likely in Setauket before the end of the year, becoming the first minister for the fledgling Anglican Christ Church congregation (now Caroline Church).
In Virginia, a group of enslaved Africans wrote an appeal to the Bishop of London. The three-page letter was dated August and September 1723. The letter began, “To The Right Raverrand father in god my Lord arch Bishop of Lonnd … there is in this Land of verjennia a Sort of people that is Calld molatters which are Baptised and brouaht up in the way of Christian faith and followes the wayes an Rulles of the Church of England and sum of them has white fathars and sum white mothers and there is in this Land a Law or act which keeps and make them and their seed Slaves forever —.”
Edmund Gibson, bishop of London from 1723 until his death in 1748, was a key figure in the growth of the Anglican Church in America. A well-respected and tireless advocate for teaching Christianity to both African Americans and American indigenous people, Gibson’s appointment in 1723 inspired a group of enslaved African Americans to
write a letter to him secretly, in one paragraph asking, “by the help of our Sufvering Lord King George and the Rest of the Rullers will Releese us out of this Cruell Bondegg and this wee beg for Jesus Christs his Sake who has commaded us to seeke first the kingdom of god and all things shall be addid un to us.”
A question comes to mind as it is almost unfathomable that a group of enslaved Africans in Virginia were able to secure paper and ink, write on two different dates, address the letter and have it sent to London, for as written by Frederick Douglass more than a century later, “... [for slaveholders] it is almost an unpardonable offence to teach slaves to read in this Christian country.”
(“Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave”, p38)
We know the letter was received and saved by Gibson, as it is a part of the collection of the Lambeth Palace Library, London, founded in 1610. In 1727, Bishop Gibson sent a letter “to the masters and mistresses of families in the English plantations abroad exhorting them to encourage and promote the instruction of their Negroes in the Christian Faith.”
If the 1723 letter from the anonymous enslaved people from Virginia had any effect on Bishop Gibson prior to writing his 1727 letter, it may have been due to this paragraph, “and Sir wee your humble perticners do humblly beg the favour of your Lord Ship that your honour will grant and Settell one thing upon us which is that our childarn may be broatt up in the way of the Christtian faith and our desire is that they may be Larnd the Lords prayer the creed and the ten commandements and that they may appeare Every Lord’s day att Church before the Curatt to bee Exammond for our desire is that godllines Shoulld abbound amongs us and wee desire that our Childarn be putt to Scool and and Larnd to Reed through the Bybell which is all att prasant with our prayers to god for itts good Success before your honour these from your humbell Servants in the Lord.”
The last entry on the letter was written a month later, “September 8, 1723 — To the Right Reverrand father in god — my Lord arch bishup of J London — these with care — wee dare nott Subscribe any mans name to this for feare of our masters for if they knew that wee have Sent home to your honour wee Should goo neare to Swing upon the gallass tree”
My final thought, on the importance of recognizing the catastrophic effect of American slavery, can be no better than to quote Wendell Phillips, American abolitionist, in his introduction to Douglass’ book “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave.”
Phillips writes, “I was glad to learn, in your story, how early the most neglected of God’s children waken to a sense of their rights, and of the injustice done them. Experience is a keen teacher; and long before you had
mastered you’re A B C, or knew where the ‘white sails’ of the Chesapeake were bound, you began, I see, to gauge the wretchedness of the slave, not by his hunger and want, not by his lashes and toil, but by the cruel and blighting death which gathers over his soul.”
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VILLAGEOFPOQUOTT
ZONINGBOARD
VARIANCEHEARING NOTICEOF OFAPPEALS
FEBRUARY15,2023
PLEASETAKENOTICEthat
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Poquott,NewYork11733, Hall,45BirchwoodAvenue, 7:00p.m.atPoquottVillage
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exceed$2,250,000pursuanttotheLocalFinanceLaw inzoneAandtheapplicant minimumsideyardis25ft.
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of11.8ft.
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Date:January25,2023
CindySchleider
VillageClerk
VillageofPoquott
45BirchwoodAve.
Poquott,NY11733
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To our readers: We appreciate your weekly letters to the editor. Writing a letter enables vital communication and contributes to a meaningful community dialogue. It is also a safety valve for expressing different, equally passionately held opinions in a civil fashion.
Letter writing can be powerful as the writer broadcasts opinions to the wider public. Here at TBR News Media, our editorial staff shoulders responsibility in channeling that message appropriately.
We hope writers and readers can regard our letters page as a community forum, a place to express themselves and potentially influence their peers and neighbors. But by necessity, this forum must be moderated to function. When a writer expresses a thought as a fact, we do our best to confirm the information is accurate. If we cannot find the information on our own, we go back to the writer and ask for a source. As journalists, we have an obligation to ensure that the facts cited are verified, that we are not allowing someone to use our letters page to spread misinformation or vitriol.
Often we are asked why our letters do not focus squarely on local matters. It’s simple — we don’t receive as many localized letters as we would like.
Our editors aim to choose letters that represent a mix of local, county, state and national topics. We also look for a mix of opinions from conservative, liberal and moderate points of view. Letters serve as a form of public debate, and people from various sides of the political spectrum should be heard.
Moderating our letters page, we view ourselves as mediators for the various interests and opinions of the community. By sharing diverse perspectives on a range of topics, we arm our readers with the information and give them the freedom to make up their own minds.
We are asked why certain writers appear regularly on the opinion page. It’s because they write to us often and thoughtfully, and contribute to the public dialogue. We welcome and encourage letters from readers, and we hope to continue seeing new names each week.
Sometimes, we don’t receive a substantial number of letters to choose from each week that gives both sides of an issue.
If readers feel something is missing from our paper — whether from the news or editorial sections — we urge that they write us. We welcome readers’ thoughts — including criticism — regarding our content. Please feel free to react to a recent article or reflect upon life in our hometown. You can comment on an entertaining festival or even chronicle a delightful day spent at the park. The opportunities for letter writing are endless, so don’t be shy. Let your thoughts be heard.
We edit letters not to censor, but to catch grammatical mistakes, for consistency and to protect the media outlet and letter writers from libel suits. We edit for A.P. style, which is the standard in most U.S.-based news publications. We also edit for length and good taste. If a letter runs longer, we may print it as a perspective piece along with the writer’s photo.
As for good taste, our letters page is not the place to bash a neighbor or a fellow writer. There are plenty of instances when one writer will reference another person and their letter, addressing specific ideas in the other’s writings, and that’s acceptable. However, name-calling or denigration are not helpful.
In the past, we have received letters using derogatory nicknames for presidents and other officials and political figures. We do our best to edit out uncivil language.
The letters page is not a place for one to spew animosity or insults. If blanket, hateful statements are made about a group of people based on the color of their skin, ethnicity or religion, they will not be published. Our letters page is designed to add to, not detract from, a healthy public discourse.
So, please send us a letter — see address and formal policy statement to the right of this editorial. We are always interested in your thoughts, especially regarding what goes on in our coverage area.
Two letters in the Jan. 19 TBR News Media newspapers — by George Altemose [“Not only Santos economical with the truth”] and Mark Sertoff [“No electric car for me”] — are flagrant examples of a tactic dubbed by rightwing ideologue Steve Bannon as “flooding the zone with BS.” The strategy aims to overwhelm readers with long lists of false, misleading and irrelevant information, making it difficult for readers to separate fact from fiction.
Sertoff’s letter omits the most crucial fact about electric vehicles: They are dramatically more energy efficient than internal combustion engines. EVs convert about 60% of their battery energy into movement, while internal combustion engines convert just 20% — the rest is lost as heat. Large power plants are about 45% efficient. So, even with energy losses along the path, most electric vehicles still get more than 100 miles-per-gallon equivalent, which means fill-ups for $15. Recycling, battery performance and power distribution are indeed challenges, but all are being addressed and are perfectly solvable. But Sertoff doesn’t really care about the environmental or social impacts of lithium mining, given the overwhelming impacts of fossil fuel extraction and climate change. The purpose of his letter is to stoke the flames of the culture war on behalf of a Republican Party and conservative media heavily funded by the energy industry.
The letter by George Altemose drew a false equivalency between embellishments — some minor, some serious — and the outright fabrication of an entire identity by recently elected U.S. Rep. George Santos [R-NY3]. Santos claimed education, degrees, finances and work history that were completely false, along with a host of other personal attributes that appear to be utter fabrications.
Altemose accused Rep. Adam Schiff [D-CA30] of “lying” about having evidence of Trump campaign collusion with Russia. However, the evidence Schiff referred to includes emails showing that Russian agents offered the campaign “dirt” on Hillary
Clinton as “part of Russia and its government’s support for Trump.” Then-Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump wrote back, “If it’s what you say I love it,” and the campaign eagerly took the meeting.
Later, 2016 campaign manager Paul Manafort shared internal Trump campaign polling data and strategy with former Russian Ambassador Sergey Kislyak. The only plausible reason to do that would be to allow Russia to coordinate its U.S. election influence operations. That Trump himself wasn’t charged with being a foreign agent doesn’t change the documented facts of multiple Trump associates’ numerous illicit contacts with Russian representatives. Even if legal, what else can all this be called but “collusion”?
But Altemose doesn’t really care about politicians’ honesty. The purpose of his letter is to draw attention away from the Republican failure to expel Santos from the party and force his resignation.
Why does TBR News Media continue to publish such transparently misleading letters? By all means let’s argue about which facts are more important, and what our national energy goals should be. But the media have a responsibility to exercise some judgment about the veracity and honesty of what they publish.
John Hover East SetauketEven with the opening 15 years late on Jan. 25, MTA Chair and CEO Janno Lieber and Gov. Kathy Hochul [D] still refuse to acknowledge that the $11.6 billion cost for construction of Long Island Rail Road East Side Access to Grand
Central Madison is misleading. It does not include $1 billion debt service payments for borrowing costs bringing the price tag to $12.6 billion. Debt service charges are buried under a separate agency operating budget.
There is also $4 billion plus for indirect costs known as LIRR readiness projects. They took place east of the Harold Interlocking near Woodside carried off line from the official project budget. These include the $2.6 billion Main Line Third Track, $450 million Jamaica Capacity Improvements, $387 million Ronkonkoma Double Track Project, $120 million Ronkonkoma Yard Expansion, $44 million Great Neck Pocket Track, $423 million for rail car fleet expansion and others that are necessary for successful full implementation of East Side Access.
Without these projects, the LIRR would have lacked the expanded operational capabilities to support both promised 24 rush-hour train service to Grand Central Madison along with a 40% increase in reverse peak service as per the Federal Transit Administration MTA 2006 Capital Investment $6.3 billion Full Funding Grant Agreement. The federal share was capped at $2.6 billion. The MTA also had to pick up the tab for any additional costs above $6.3 billion. The temporary shuttle service between Jamaica station and Grand Central Madison was never designed to be permanent. Rather, it gave the MTA and Hochul political cover so they could claim service began. Commuters will have to wait many more weeks to see the full benefits of East Side Access when the LIRR ends the temporary limited service and initiates full service.
Larry Penner Great NeckO
The next day, your life changes.
D. None of the above
You want to know why or how, but you’re too busy trying to apply the brakes to a process that threatens the nature of your existence and your current and future happiness.
Your son had some gastrointestinal issues for a few weeks. You took him to the pediatrician and he said he’s got to get over a virus.
You wait, hope, and maybe say a few extra prayers, because the hardest thing for any parent
ne day, you’re playing with your twin sons at home, running around with a ball on the driveway, calling and waving to neighbors who pass by when they walk their dogs or take their daily stroll through the neighborhood.to endure is the sickness of a child.
You check on him, day after day, hoping he’s better, only to find that there’s no improvement.
Suddenly, three weeks later, you’re in the hospital, trying to keep yourself, your spouse, and your other son calm while doctors remove a malignant brain cancer in a 5-year-old boy who defines “goofy” and “playful.”
One of our close friends in our neighborhood just started this unimaginable battle against a disease many of us know all too well, although the specific form of cancer varies.
Their babysitter shared the horror of the prior weekend with me outside the window of her passing car, where she normally would have driven both the twins to school.
I heard the story because I asked about the empty car seat in the back, where both boys typically showed me whatever stuffed animals or toys they had decided to bring to school, either for show and tell or because they were carrying an object that began with a particular letter.
As I talked with the babysitter, who spoke
in the kind of hushed and dramatic tones often associated with discussions about serious health crises, I thought about how hard it was and will be for the other son. I thought he needed the kind of 5-year-old normalcy that might become hard to find when he’s worried about his brother and the anxious adults around him.
I asked him to show me what he was holding. He had a pink llama, who he said wanted to poop on my head or on my dog’s head.
I told him that my dog wouldn’t appreciate the poop unless the stuffed llama somehow pooped pink marshmallows.
He laughed, flashing all his straight baby teeth.
As I walked home, I thought of all the things my wife and I planned to offer our neighbors. Maybe we’d babysit the healthy son, walk their dogs, help with house chores, bring over food, do anything to lighten the unbearably heavy load.
I also thought about all the scientists at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Brookhaven National Laboratory and Stony Brook University I have
known who are working towards cures for cancer.
Many of them know someone in their family, their friend group, their neighborhood, or their schools who, like my daughter’s beloved firstgrade teacher, suddenly were in a battle for their lives against a disease that steals time and joy from people’s lives.
Their labs often invite or include family members of people with cancer to staff meetings and discussions about their work, making the connection between what the scientists are studying and the people desperate for solutions.
It seems utterly cliche to write it, but I’m going to do it anyway: we should appreciate and enjoy the days we have when we’re not in that battle. The annoyance of dealing with someone who got our order wrong at a restaurant seems so spectacularly small in comparison.
We can appreciate that the person who seems like a total jerk for cutting us off on our way home may also be the one racing back to hug his child or spouse after an impossible day that changed his life.
wild rainstorm. Unable to see the road ahead, and with all of them feeling in peril, Tony parks and ushers his family into an Italian restaurant nearby. There, despite the loss of electricity, the proprietor cooks a marvelous pasta dinner for them, which they finally calm down and eat by candlelight, huddled together at a table in the warm and dry dining room. As he is appreciating the spaghetti on his fork, Tony looks up and says to his children something like, “When you think back on your childhood, it will be scenes like this that you will remember,” while the camera fades out.
a large frying pan from the cupboard, mixed together flour, eggs and milk, poured Hi-Hat peanut oil (the popular brand then) into the pan, and started cooking the mixture, as thunder cracked overhead. Almost immediately, the irresistible smell of the pancakes started to fill the rustic room.
peaceful sail near New Haven harbor, my husband and three sons and I, sprawled out in the big cockpit, when the unexpected shift in weather occurred.
Between
BY LEAH S. DUNAIEF
Having been exposed to the pleasure of streaming movies on my “smart” television, I now look for good stories and have caught up with “The Sopranos.” I well remember how popular the series was, running from Jan. 10, 1999, to June 10, 2007, winning all kinds of awards and addicting millions with its 86 episodes. Somehow I never caught up with the drama, but now, thanks to HBOMax, I have turned the family room into a nightly theater and watch as Tony Soprano tries to balance his work “family” and his biological family responsibilities, thanks to the help of an Italian-American woman psychiatrist.
At the end of the latest installment, Tony, his wife Carmela and his daughter and son are driving at night when they are deluged by a
That got me thinking. Can I recall such scenes from my childhood, when being with my family in a safe place was so comforting?
One of the first such memories for me was of an intense rainstorm in the Catskill Mountains. I was perhaps 5 or 6 and with my mother and sister in a dilapidated cabin, whose roof leaked ominously. After my mother put pails under the leaks, she realized I was frightened. “Just wait,” she said with a smile, “This storm has brought us pancakes.” With that, she took out
TIMES BEACON RECORD NEWS MEDIAMy mother dabbed the extra oil from the dollar-sized pancakes at the stove, put them on a platter on the kitchen table, brought out a bottle of maple syrup, and my sister and I started to eat ravenously. Soon, my mother joined us at the table, and despite the frequent bolts of lightning I could see through the windows behind her head, and the dripping water in the buckets, I felt warm and safe. The only trouble with that memory: every time there is a heavy rain, I get the urge for pancakes.
I asked my middle son if he had such a memory, and he remembered when we were out in the Sound in our 22-foot Pearson Ensign day sailboat, and the wind and seas suddenly picked up. We had been enjoying a sunny,
With the waves towering around us, we pulled down the sail, put the outboard motor at the stern on high speed, and made for the harbor. My husband, at the tiller, gave each of us a task. My sons were to bail out the water that was flooding the cockpit with every crashing wave, and I was to sit on top of the motor to try and keep it in the water every time a wave pushed us up.
Needless to say, it was a harrowing ride until we finally reached shore and tied up at the marina, onlookers clapping. We left the boat and were thrilled to be on the sand. Drenched as we were, we walked the short distance to the harborside restaurant, Chart House and, laughing by then, had one of the best meals of our lives.
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Sopranos’ and our scary sailboat ride